I went by the Frick Collection tonight - left work a little early so I could see two shows that are currently on display. I normally don’t go to the Frick, I find the atmosphere and lighting at the Frick way too stuffy, too dark for me.  I used to go a lot more often when I was younger - and it was free. Now it costs 15 bucks to get into the Frick..and I’m fine with that …. I just don’t like the Frick as a place to hang out.  Â
And the Weird thing…even though The Frick Collection is a mansion - to me - it feels cluttered, small. You’d think a mansion should feel big ..but the only room that really feels big…..is BIG - the main room; other than that ….the Frick feels cluttered to me.
But I went because I wanted to see Cimabue and Early Italian Devotional Painting  - the whole show was in a tiny room, only two panels were painted by Cimabue - the rest were done by contemporaries of Cimabue.  While I think Cimabue is great …it’s really not my type of painting …it’s too far removed from life, as it is today, and I’m really not a strong fan of painting of that time… great as it is.
Maybe I’m sick of seeing so much religious painting …..you know artists had to paint religious works because that’s where the money was….you don’t paint Jesus…you starve (an oversimplification - but essentially true).  That’s how it was till the 19th Century - and it was not till the Impressionists that we were free of the domination of the Church.
Today…it’s hard to imagine what would be comparable - maybe artists living in Communist countries 40 years ago that had to paint propaganda to show anything at all.
The artists, in this case Cimabue, might have been religious, for all I know, but I’m kinda sick of seeing art that is about “another time” - stuff that happened 1300 years earlier than Cimabue - and the only thing we can infer about Medieval times, and pre-renaissance is in the handling of the figures, maybe the faces, maybe the technique and drawing.

In fact, I don’t really mind the religious aspect of Cimabue - I sorta expect it. I mind it more in the rest of the paintings at the Frick Collection - the one’s both in the regular collection AND the Masterpieces of European Painting from The Cleveland Museum of Art.
I will start first with what I liked and then go into what I didn’t care for.
First of all, there were few paintings, maybe a dozen from the Cleveland Museum of Art being loaned for this exhibition. My favorite painting in the show - Francisco de Zurbarán’s Christ and the Virgin in the House of Nazareth (you can see a larger image by clicking on the hyperlink)
 
Just visiting the Frick to see the Zurbarán painting was worth it - even if that’s all I saw….the Zurbarán painting is one of his very finest. I did notice the “window” in the upper rear of the paintings seemed to be painted more as an afterthought - as if the painting used to be totally dark on top and the artist found he needed more light and shape there - so he painted a square that looks like it’s a window.
I also liked the Velázquez portrait of The Jester Calabazas due to the unusual motifs on the pinwheel and zig-zag chair - and I also liked the composition. I also liked Andrea Del Sarto’s The Sacrifice of Isaac because part of the painting (middle far right) with the under drawing - Del Sarto drew out the in strong outlines all the main objects in the painting and then did his magic with the glazing - but for me, the under drawing is actually more interesting.
I also looked at Domenico Tiepolo’s - A New Testament - a series of several drawings Tiepolo did - some of the drawings looked like they were slowly decaying. While I liked the Tiepolo drawings - though I have a hard time relating to 1750’s Venice with it’s emphasis on what appears to be a natty society rich with color and social incidents. Perhaps the most interesting motif that Tiepolo drew, is his dogs - he repeats, what appears to be a greyhound, in several drawings and I can relate to the dog way more than the religious figures that were, again, what artists kinda had to paint.  The architecture, castles, building edges - are clearly thrown in from imagination (even if buildings like that existed in Venice) and show a love for perspective.
I’m not even sure the drawings of Domenico Tiepolo (the younger Tiepolo) were commissioned or did he do them for himself only… I guess I don’t really care. What was meaningful to me today - his freshness in drawing and focusing on the dogs the liked. Maybe the show should have been called…the Dogs of Domenico Tiepolo - that would have been much more fun.
OK, here’s where I go into my rant about what I did not like: Nicolas Poussin painting of The Holy Family on the Steps appeared unnatural and fake in it’s rigidness. The faces of the Holy Family look like Barbie dolls - but worse - and as I mentioned - I’ve overdosed on the fake religious propaganda that’s shoved down my throat the majority of paintings in the Frick Collection. I understand that was the way it was but I don’t have to like it and relate to it… and I don’t.  I like Poussin’s paintings … just not this one. Poussin’s approach feels too deliberate and studied for me. Cezanne’s approach was Poussin redone for the late 19th Century and the 20th Century and is much, much more satisfying to look at for me..than Poussin’s reconstructions of history (impressive in his time - but not effective or interesting in ours). Recreations of Nature are much more interesting than Recreations of faked historical events that were not really witnessed by Poussin (unless he was the reincarnation of one of twelve apostles - and even then - do we really want to recreate the past….or look to the future?).Â
At least, Cezanne re-created what he saw…. not some fake thing made out of wooden models and faked perspective. Maybe that’s what people liked in the 1600’s - a civilization that’s looking back to Roman Times to determine what fashion and art should be….. but it’s totally out of place in the Twenty First Century …our time.
I also hated Jacques-Louis David’s Cupid and Psyche - David would have been luckier had he died maybe 20 years before - most of his late work is dry and awful - you have to wonder how such a great painter ended up semi-senile. I don’t think it’s going too far to all Cupid and Psyche a banal painting. All that’s left in David’s later paintings is his skill - what actually made David great was who he knew and how he painted them - with a directness that was in tune with the time around the French Revolution and Napoleon ’s reign. David reached his peak earlier in his life and basically was on auto pilot shortly after 1800, the rest of what he produced is not that significant to Art and actually, in some cases, is an embarrassment to his real legacy.
I just want to say that my favorite room at the Frick Collection is the gift shop — it’s actually well lit.